Product Details
2046 [2005] [DVD]

2046 [2005] [DVD]
Directed by Kar Wai Wong

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #7172 in DVD
  • Released on: 2005-05-23
  • Rating: Suitable for 12 years and over
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: Anamorphic, PAL, Widescreen
  • Original language: Cantonese Chinese
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 129 minutes

Editorial Reviews

DVD Description
2046 continues the story of Chow Mo Wan (Tony Leung) from Wong Kar-Wai's previous film, In the Mood for love, a few years after his ephemeral affair with Su Li-zhen (Maggie Cheung)The time is now the late 1960's Hong Kong, Chow is now an out of work journalist and pulp fiction writer.

DVD EXTRAS - UK Exclusive interview, Zhang Ziyi interview, Behind the scenes footage, Casta Diva music video, Theatrical trailers, Film notes.

Synopsis
Director Wong Kar-Wai's style reaches its fullest expression in his stunning film 2046. Picture-perfect period sets and costuming, finely wrought atmosphere, languid shots, glamorous cigarette smoke, amber lamplight, and allusions to film noir. 2046 is a meditation on memory, eroticism, love, loss, and longing which surpasses the director's beautiful, widely acclaimed IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE (2000) in terms of formal ambition and visual sumptuousness. With its intriguing, layered structure, the film follows the adventures of Chow Wo Man (Tony Leung), a womaniser who is writing a science fiction novel about a future year in which all memories are suspended. The film shuttles between the BLADE RUNNER-like world of Chow's futuristic novel (complete with androids and other metaphors of emotional disconnection) and late-'60s Hong Kong--where Chow writes from a hotel room, and engages in relationships with a series of beautiful, complex women (including the luminous trio of Gong Li, Zhang Ziyi, and Faye Wong). The film also journeys to Singapore and through the increasingly mysterious corridors of the protagonist's memory. 2046 resists tidy plot summaries with its disjointed, zigzagging construction. Yet, coupled with Wong's rich cinematography and dazzling formal techniques, it is as fluid, associative, and labyrinthine as memory itself. Sliding between keenly detailed realism (Wong's camera can capture the subtlest flicker of emotion in a characters' eyes) and lavish, expressionistic metaphor, the film is a deeply entrancing experience. Even given its jumbled, sometimes chaotic narrative, 2046 creates a poignant, emotionally charged, and richly rewarding experience.


Customer Reviews

masterful5
2046 is a masterful period piece and profoundly moving meditation on unrequited love, loss and desire. Its narrative is complex and rambling, its effect verbose and grandiose. But its combination of emotional impact and sumptuous visual artistry lift it into lofty cinematic heights.

The central character from 'in the mood for love' is reprised as a deeply jaded modern Casanova in 1960's Hong kong. Love is intricately bound to loss for him and his Hong Kong exploits serve to inflict this view upon his amorous conquests. The period detail and nuance of character and acting are exceptional. The same themes from 'in the mood for love' are blown up onto a radically large, disjointed canvas encompassing mirror narratives and a science fiction future. Is some of the effectiveness of the earlier work lost in the process? Maybe so but the artistic imagination and emotional evocation of themes make up for this.

2046 is used to stand for that which is desired and simultaneously unattainable. A date too far in the future for the characters to live to. Through the main character Tony Leung's writing of a short story 2047 and a future narrative set on a bullet train the idea that love is already lost is repeatedly evoked. This supremely jaded view of life and love is brought out in all the central character's doings.'I,m already missing you' black spider tells him in Singapore. Fictional episodes penned by Tony Leung blend with the main narrative to constantly stir up this tragic outlook. The viewer is left haunted and spellbound by the sumptuous visual realization of the lives of the characters in Hong Kong, and by the bravado and imagination of the science fiction story within a story. For someone unfamiliar with Wong Kar-wai's earlier work this could all seem like a bridge too far. But fans of 'in the mood for love' will recognize an accomplished master letting loose with all the tools and imagination in a considerable arsenal.

An amazing film5
This is an amazing film, that gets better with each repeated viewing. "2046" is a hotel room number, which for the hero, Chow, encapsulates his lost love, as it unfolded in the prequel to this movie, "In the Mood for Love." Here, "2046" also becomes a year to which one can travel by a time-machine type of train, a year in which it is believed people can recapture their lost memories. The film consists of the hero, who has loved and lost, going through a series of encounters with women, who in their turn have loved and lost. Throughout his series of experiences with women, he is in fact only looking for his lost love, Su Lizhen, but he can never refind her.

This is a rough, simplified plot synopsis, but the movie is much more complex than this, and it requires repeated viewings to enhance understanding. The repeated viewings are extremely rewarding, as this film is one of those art objects from which the viewer can draw new insights with each reexperiencing of it.

The cinematography is beautiful, and the musical score is absolutely superb and moving, underscoring the emotions felt by the characters. The music is designed to enhance our experience of each scene and to intensify emotion. Granted, the film is not an easy one to follow. Personally, I felt confused at times, especially on a first viewing. But at such moments you can just let yourself go with the emotion carried through image and sound.

"2046" rewards us with a beautiful and talented cast. I really enjoyed watching all the actresses that paraded on screen, among them Zhang Ziyi, of "Hero" and "Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon," Gong Li, Carina Lau, Faye Wong and Maggie Cheung, all of them giving superb performances.

As other reviewers have noted, it is not mandatory to see the prequel "In the Mood for Love" to understand "2046," but it is well worth it, as there are many symbols from the previous film repeated in this one, and a scene where Su Lizhen reappears in Chow's memory. Personally, I liked "2046" better.

Finally, I have to add that this film, though from my point of view amazing, is certainly not for everyone. If you prefer a straightforward storyline and a plot where things are happening all the time, then this film is not for you. This film emphasizes emotional experience at the expense of plot. As long as you come prepared for this, and with the right expectations, it is a great film, very rewarding and very worthy of repeated viewings.

Abstractions, reflections, and moments in time.5
2046 is perhaps Wong Kar-Wai's ultimate statement as a filmmaker... an epic, multi-layered masterpiece that acts as a sort of culmination of various themes, ideas, characters and motifs developed as far back as 1991 with his second feature, Days Of Being Wild. It also acts as a direct sequel to his last film, the sombre and restrained period piece, In The Mood For Love, with its continuation of the character, Mr. Chow, and his metamorphosis from polite, married journalist, to swinging playboy and creator of a series of steamy novellas set within the fictional world of 2046... a self-reflexive commentary on the themes and ideas established in the previous film, as well as a revaluation of the characters and scenarios that will appear in this film as well.

Like a lot of his work, the film is a rumination on time and memory, and a comment on how those factors can both soothe and enrage the ghosts of past heartache. It's also a comment on the writing process in general, with the character of Mr. Chow writing the story of 2046 - and it's follow up, 2047 - whilst simultaneously commenting on his own character, the women around him and the film it's self. There's certainly an air of Fellini about the project in this respect, with the film really coming down to a series of episodic love-affairs that only end up relating back to that ephemeral relationship between Chow and Su Li-zhen in the earlier film, with the allusions to La Dolce Vita, Casanova and The City of Women all bubbling away under the various other references and possible interpretations woven so meticulously into the story and the images.

Like In The Mood For Love, the film employs a fractured visual style to compliment the fragmented plot, with Wong and his three cinematographers shooting the action through doorways, windows, the cross-roads of corridors, breaking the composition up to obscure characters behind art-deco and pieces of furniture, whilst also using the stroboscopic technique familiar from all of Wong's previous films (in particular, ChungKing Express) to add a further, dislocated, dreamlike quality to the images. The use of colour, particularly in the scenes set within the story of 2046 and 2047 are absolutely ravishing, with Wong and, in particular, Chris Doyle (who shot the majority of the film) drowning the visual palette with amber yellows, deep purples, and violent reds. It's without question one of the most beautiful films I've ever seen, on a par with Cocteau's Beauty and The Beast, Kubrick's Barry Lyndon, von Trier's Europa, and Zhang Yimou's Hero... which was also shot by Doyle.

As noted before, there are quite a few layers woven into the film, like much of Wong's work the film is always evolving in a manner that is at times hard to fully comprehend, with the film really requiring a few viewings for the story to fully emerge. Although it seems like a continuation of Wong's style, particularly the style of his previous film, it also seems like something of a radical departure... a work of astounding intricacy and personal reflection akin to Tarkovsky's similarly personal and fragmented masterpiece Mirror. This, for me, is an apt comparison, with Wong using a lot of mirrored symbolism, not only in the way that he uses mirrors and reflective surfaces to capture the reactions of his characters, but also in the way that the women who move through the life of Mr. Chow seem to offer a reflection, or distant echo, of the character originally portrayed by Maggie Cheung.

This kind of deep interpretation might come across as guesswork or intellectual masturbation on my part, but for me, 2046 is an endlessly fascinating film open to a myriad of personal interpretations. Like the other commentators mentioned, the film works best if you bring your own pain and experiences to it, allowing the story of Chow and the relationship at the heart of In The Mood For Love to once again mirror our own thoughts and feelings. It is obvious throughout the film that Chow is a deeply wounded character hiding behind a façade of cool arrogance and heartless sex, though there is still that shard of naive romanticism so prevalent in Mood... lurking deep beneath the surface. This is most apparent towards the end of the film, in which we see Chow decamp to the gambling dens of Shanghai, where he meets a mysterious woman with a gloved hand, who is also mysteriously named Su Li-zhen.

Is this a real character or another creation of Mr. Chow, no different than the ciphers and abstractions found in his book, the scenes from which make up a great deal of the film's final act. The depiction of the world of 2046 and 2047 is one of the most startling cinematic creations ever witnessed, far-surpassing Kubrick's vision in 2001... the use of music, editing and cinematographic composition is astounding, whilst the whole final act of the films just brims with a melancholic beauty that is a heartbreaking and transcendent as those final scenes set within the ruined city, from In The Mood For Love. As with that film, 2046 begins and ends with a reprise of Chow's story about the man who whispered his deepest secrets into a hole carved within a rock, which adds a further element of self-reflection to the notion of writing and storytelling here.

Certainly a film of this nature won't appeal to all tastes, with a lot of viewers complaining about the continual fragmentation of the plot and the slow pace, which offers moments of thought and reflection (rare in today's fast-food cinema)... however, I feel that those really captivated by the ephemeral and ethereal depiction of love and undying devotion seen in the previous film of this cycle, or those with a fondness for the cinema of Tarkovsky, Fellini and indeed, Wong himself, will find this film suitably enthralling. For me, it's a fascinating work, one that is open to interpretation and rewards our patients and it's need for repeated viewings with a beautiful atmosphere, an enriching story, and some of the most beautiful images ever seen.